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Plug & Play Rigging for Today’s Advanced Trolling Motors

Plug & Play Rigging for Today’s Advanced Trolling Motors
Connect-Ease® 2.0 PRO Trolling Connection Kits provide anglers with reliable, plug & play rigging systems (w/onboard charging) for today’s newest trolling motors & lithium or AGM batteries
PRIOR LAKE, MN (March 18, 2024) – For anglers running today’s newest brushed or brushless, direct-drive, and more powerful 12-, 24-, and 36-volt bow-mount trolling motors, Connect-Ease® is proud to introduce the Connect-Ease 2.0 PRO Trolling Motor Connection Kit w/Onboard Charging, which features heavier-duty 6-gauge wire and many other engineering advances. For 36-volt trolling motors like the new Minn Kota QUEST Series, Garmin Force Kraken,  Lowrance GHOST, Power-Pole MOVE, MotorGuide Tour Pro, and Rhodan models, the Connect-Ease 2.0 36V Series PRO Trolling Motor Connection Kit W/Onboard Charging is incredibly easy-to-install, protects your investment, and offers peace of mind while fishing mission-critical, tournament or big water situations.But you don’t have to be a pro angler to utilize the new Connect-Ease 2.0 kit—any angler or boater who simply wants his boat or pontoon to work perfectly every time on the water—will benefit from a Connect-Ease 2.0 Pro Trolling Motor Connection Kit w/Onboard Charging
What’s Included: NEW Connect-Ease 2.0 (RCE36VPRO) 36V Trolling Motor/Charger KitThe Connect-Ease 2.0 PRO 36V Trolling Motor/Charger Kit includes three 12-volt battery series connections and charger leads to connect both your bow-mount trolling motor and onboard charger.While the components could be considered over-engineered, Connect-Ease 2.0’s mission was to provide a no-fail power distribution network no matter what kind of on-the-water situations you encounter, from fishing the Great Lakes or heavy current river fisheries to a weekend off work relaxing on the pontoon or skiff.Fact: Believe it or not, but a lot of boat manufacturers, dealers, and riggers do not use marine-grade wire.On the contrary, every Connect-Ease 2.0 PRO 36V Series Pro Trolling Motor Connection Kit w/Onboard Charging includes thick, efficient, and long-lasting 6-gauge (AWG) marine-grade tinned copper wire and components that protect from corrosion, electrolysis, and fatigue due to boat vibration and flexing in waves and wind. Heavy-duty insulation offers additional heat, cold, abrasion, and vibration resistance.In fact, Connect-Ease 6-gauge (AWG) marine-grade wire exceeds all UL 1426 U.S. Coast Guard Charter Boat and ABYC standards, something we didn’t have to do, but did.While it cost us more at the onset, we built-these professional components into the new kit because we wanted all anglers and boaters to benefit from the same, pro-grade materials we use in our own 36-volt trolling motor rigging for problem-free operation in critical fishing and boating situations—from big league bass/walleye tournaments to hard-earned time-off-work.Additionally, the Connect-Ease 2.0 36V Series PRO Trolling Motor Connection Kit w/Onboard Charging includes a 60 amp Resettable Circuit Breaker and Negative Connection Block with direct connection leads and heat-shrinkable butt splices to quickly and securely connect the kit to chargers manufactured by Minn Kota, NoCo, PowerPole, Battery Tender, Dakota Lithium and countless others. 
The end result for the angler/boater? You’ll never have to worry about your 36-volt trolling motor being powered correctly again with Connect-Ease 2.0 PRO.Whether you’re running standard or new, high-output Minn Kota QUEST, Garmin Force Kraken, Lowrance Ghost, Power-Pole MOVE, or MotorGuide Tour Grade 24- and 36-volt trolling motors, what you get with the Connect-Ease 2.0 Pro Trolling Motor Connection Kits w/Onboard Charging is pure, clean power from your batteries to the trolling motor and charger, end of story.For anglers running 24V trolling motors, the Connect-Ease 2.0 PRO 24V Pro Trolling Motor Kit (RCE24VPROCHK) offers similar advantages with onboard charging and lithium compatibility.Talking specs, both the new Connect-Ease 2.0 24V and 36V Series PRO Trolling Motor Connection Kits w/Onboard Charging will distribute and manage up to 150 amps of power. 
Whether you’re going to rig a new boat, re-rig an older boat, or seek out marine professionals to help you switch out trolling motor batteries, power distribution, and marine electronics for the season, Connect-Ease products promise problem-free operation of today’s latest and greatest, from today’s more powerful and advanced trolling motors to forward-facing sonar technologies. We like to say: “More time fishing, less time rigging.” 



Dustin Connell Wins Major League Fishing’s Bass Pro Shops REDCREST 2024 on Lay Lake

Clanton, Alabama’s Dustin Connell becomes first angler to earn two REDCREST Championship Titles, earns top payout of $300,000

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (March 17, 2024) – Just about every day in the 13 months since Major League Fishing announced that Bass Pro Shops REDCREST 2024 Powered by OPTIMA Lithium would take place on Lay Lake, Dustin Connell has thought about what it would be like to taste victory at the Coosa River impoundment where he grew up fishing.

But in all his dreaming, scheming and practicing, the Clanton, Alabama, native didn’t envision this.

Connell routed the rest of the Championship Round field Sunday, stacking 28 scorable bass for 83 pounds on SCORETRACKER® – more than 30 pounds better than runner-up Alton Jones, Jr. of Waco, Texas. The dominant performance earned Connell $300,000 and made him the first ever two-time winner of the Bass Pro Tour’s championship event.

Link to HD Video – Fish-Catch Highlights of REDCREST 2024 Day 4 on Lay Lake
Link to Photo Gallery of REDCREST 2024 Day 4 Championship Round Afternoon Highlights

It wasn’t just his margin of victory that surprised Connell but how he made it happen. As recently as Saturday evening, he planned to spend the final day fishing current seams in the riverine portion of the reservoir, as he had during the Knockout Round. But at the last minute, he called an audible, opting to start on the lower end of the lake targeting suspended, schooling spotted bass. One of several clutch decisions he made over the four-day event, doing so led to Connell landing on a pile of unpressured bass and unleashing an avalanche that buried the rest of the Top 10.

“This tournament has been on my radar ever since they announced it last year,” Connell said. “I’m like, ‘Oh man, I gotta win that one. That’s a great opportunity. I gotta win that one.’ And I won it today unexpectedly. I didn’t know that many [were] in there. They just moved in there.”

Competing on a fishery that an angler knows well comes with obvious advantages. Connell put his lifetime of experience on the Coosa River to use all week – knowing how baitfish and bass would behave amid the heavy current that rolled through Lay Lake, where bass would set up in that current, the best baits to trigger bites.
But there’s a reason so many anglers talk about the “home-lake curse”: Remembering places and ways one has caught fish in the past can get in the way of finding the best way to do so at the present.

Connell wasn’t immune to the pull of history, but he made it a point to base his decisions about where to fish on what he saw on the water, not where he’d found success before.

“When I’m running down the river, I’ve caught ‘em on so many different places, and I’m like, golly, I need to stop, I need to stop,” Connell said. “But I told myself before I fished this tournament, I said, ‘I’m going to fish this lake like I would any other one, not run off of history.’ I wanted to fish it brand new. And I did all week. I did really, really good practicing and just trying to find new areas.”

Key for Connell was turning over every possible stone to discover what could be the winning area. Not only during practice but also the two-day Qualifying Round, he visited every section of the lake, switching between techniques – shaking a jighead minnow for suspended fish, swimming a jig in grass, rolling a spinnerbait around laydowns, plying current seams with a scrounger head.

His thorough approach paid off on the second day of qualifying, when Connell found what would become his winning spot. Friday afternoon, he pulled into a bay off the main lake that featured two depressions where bass were chasing schools of shad. He caught just one 4-pounder there, but the number of baitfish present led him to mentally flag the area.

“The two depressions harbor the bait, and the fish swim around those depressions and feed on all the bait,” he explained. “And it’s just like their home place. It’s the deepest water in that bay, and the big spots just roam out there and chase that bait. And in the past, I’ve caught them in there. I’ve caught them on a jerkbait, I’ve seen them schooling in there. And I knew that they lived in there. I’ve caught them there a bunch of times, but not to that extent.”

Finding the area was one thing, but it took a series of clutch calls for Connell to find himself back there on Championship Day. Even as he arrived at the launch ramp Sunday morning, he was torn between returning to the river, where he’d caught more than 52 pounds of scorable bass the day prior, or joining the forward-facing sonar crowd in the lower lake. Feeling like his urge to fish current stemmed at least in part from nostalgia, he settled on starting the day chasing schooling fish, then running upriver in the afternoon, when the bite had been better the past two days (if need be).

“I said, I can catch 50-something pounds – maybe 60 (in the river),” Connell said. “I can’t catch 75 up there, no way. And I thought it was going to take 70, 72 pounds total (to win), because I figured they would catch a lot of fish. I said, ‘I’m going to go down, start down here and then work my way up.’ … Well, I never got to go upriver.”

Connell’s first stop was the main-lake area that had accounted for most of the forward-facing sonar success all week – half of the 10-angler field started Sunday morning within sight of one another. Whether due to pressure or those bass heading to the bank to spawn, it quickly became apparent that the bite had dried up.

After feeling several fish short-strike his bait, Connell became the first to leave. He first stopped in a nearby pocket before hitting the bay where he’d caught the 4-pounder two days prior. Before even dropping his trolling motor into the water, he knew he’d found something special.

“I rolled up, and as soon as I set the boat down, I saw bait on my 2D (sonar), and I said, ‘Dude, we’re about to catch ‘em,’” Connell said. “‘They’ve got to be here; all the bait’s in here.’ And this low-light conditions had all that bait up shallow, and they were there.”

Connell began Period 2 in second place, 6-7 back of Berrien Springs, Michigan pro Ron Nelson. Within the first 15 minutes, he boated back-to-back 4-pounders to take the lead. From there, the rout was on. In a 70-minute span, he put 10 scorable bass on the scale, adding 29-4 to his total and extending his cushion to more than 20 pounds. By noon, he’d already reset the bar for the best single day of the week.

He didn’t just catch fish in bulk quantities, either. Connell landed 14 spotted bass of 3 pounds or bigger and three over 4 pounds. In all, he piled on 41-12 on 14 fish during Period 2, all of them eating a new minnow-style soft plastic from Rapala CrushCity called a Mooch Minnow. The bait is slated for public release at ICAST this summer.
“That bait is the perfect size, and it has two small tabs at the back of that creates a small, subtle swimming action,” Connell explained. “And instead of it just being straight-tailed, that little action, man, it really gets them going. I caught every bass I weighed in today on that bait. And it’s made out of TPE, and you can catch like 20 fish on [each one].”

Competing amid familiar surroundings with family and friends in attendance made for an emotional week for Connell. Even before he launched Sunday, he found himself tearing up, thinking about his journey from fishing Lay Lake out of an aluminum boat as a kid to returning as one of the most accomplished pros in the world.

“I’ve been shook up all day,” Connell said. “I was crying this morning at the boat ramp. This lake is very sentimental to me – the whole Coosa River system. I grew up fishing that way, fishing those lakes and catching those big spotted bass, and it just meant a lot.”

During the final minutes of Period 3, the tears returned, as his massive lead offered Connell a rare chance to soak in the win and what it meant in real time. He reminisced about catching Lay Lake spotted bass on topwaters with his brother – who was among the contingent to greet him at the boat ramp after his win – about asking his mother to drive him to the lake so he could fish from a canoe.

In some ways, this triumph – even with its lucrative first-place paycheck – is nothing new for Connell. He’s won REDCREST before, in 2021 at Lake Eufaula. It’s his sixth Bass Pro Tour win and his second in the past six weeks after he engineered a similar final-day beatdown at Stage One on Toledo Bend.

But making another fond memory on the Coosa River and celebrating in person with some of the people who got him into fishing make this victory particularly sweet. Connell doesn’t think he could have made the winning decisions without his support system.

“I think I’ve just started to mature as an angler and understand how things happen and just be very methodical about things,” he said. “I guess, getting older, I just slow down a little bit more, just kind of analyze everything. Used to be I would freak out, run around and just make bad decisions. Now, decision-making is good, it’s solid. I’m in a good place. I have great sponsors. And when you’ve got that kind of support behind you, you can settle down.”

The top 10 pros at Bass Pro Shops REDCREST 2024 Powered by OPTIMA Lithium at Lay Lake are:

1st:        Dustin Connell, Clanton, Ala., 28 bass, 83-0, $300,000
2nd:       Alton Jones, Jr., Waco, Texas, 19 bass, 52-2, $50,000
3rd:       Ron Nelson, Berrien Springs, Mich., 12 bass, 39-9, $40,000
4th:        Takahiro Omori, Tokyo, Japan, 13 bass, 36-11, $28,000
5th:        Jesse Wiggins, Addison, Ala., 12 bass, 32-8, $25,000
6th:        Jacob Wheeler, Harrison, Tenn., 11 bass, 29-13, $20,000
7th:        Gerald Spohrer, Gonzales, La., 11 bass, 29-9, $18,000
8th:        Cole Floyd, Leesburg, Ohio, 10 bass, 25-15, $16,000
9th:        Nick Hatfield, Greeneville, Tenn., nine bass, 24-2, $14,500
10th:     Michael Neal, Dayton, Tenn., seven bass, 18-1, $12,500

A complete list of results can be found at MajorLeagueFishing.com.

Overall, there were 132 scorable bass weighing 371 pounds, 6 ounces caught by the final 10 pros Sunday. Throughout the entire four-day event, the 50 REDCREST 2024 competitors caught a total of 1,038 scorable bass weighing 2,283 pounds, 3 ounces.

Pro Ron Nelson of Berrien Springs, Michigan, earned Sunday’s $1,000 Berkley Big Bass Award with a 5-pound, 3-ounce spotted bass that he caught on a swimbait in Period 1. Power-Pole pro Chris Lane earned the $3,000 Berkley Big Bass Bonus for weighing in the heaviest bass of the event – a 7-pound, 1-ounce spotted bass that he caught on Day 2 of competition. 

Bass Pro Shops REDCREST 2024 Powered by OPTIMA Lithium on Lay Lake was hosted by the Greater Birmingham Convention & Visitors Bureau, and showcased the top 40 professional anglers from the 2023 Bass Pro Tour, along with the top champions and finishers across all MLF circuits.

Television coverage of REDCREST 2024 Powered by OPTIMA Lithium will be showcased across two, two-hour episodes, premiering at 7 a.m. ET, on Saturday, July 6 and July 13 on Discovery Channel. Starting in July 2024, MLF episodes premiere each Saturday morning on Discovery Channel, with re-airings on Outdoor Channel.

Proud sponsors of the 2024 MLF Bass Pro Tour include: Abu Garcia, B&W Trailer Hitches, Bass Pro Shops, Berkley, BUBBA, Epic Baits, Fishing Clash, Garmin, General Tire, Humminbird, Lowrance, Mercury, MillerTech, Minn Kota, Mossy Oak Fishing, NITRO, Onyx, Plano, Power-Pole, Rapala, StarBrite, Suzuki, Toyota and U.S. Air Force.

For complete details and updated information on Major League Fishing and the Bass Pro Tour, visit MajorLeagueFishing.com. For regular updates, photos, tournament news and more, follow MLF’s social media outlets at Facebook, XInstagram and  YouTube.



Alabama Native Dustin Connell Wins 2nd REDCREST Championship



Luke Nichols & Jim Jarvis Win Anglers Choice with 23.61lbs on Smith Mountain Lake

Photos & Videos taken by Alicia Matherly

Click Here to See Results

Jim Jarvis and Luke Nichols were the big winners today on the first stop of the 2024 VA division of Anglers Choice Team Tournament Trail. They weighed in five fish with a total of 23.61 pounds to take home the winning check! A very close second place went to the team of Steve Crist and Dennis Stump with 23.56 pounds! Kenny Reynolds bag of five fish hit the scales at 21.48 pounds capturing third place! CONGRATULATIONS!



Auburn Claims Fishing Version of “Iron Bowl” with ‘College Fishing Faceoff Win over Alabama

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (March 17, 2024) – Two Alabama staples are bass fishing and college football. While the Bass Pro Shops REDCREST Powered by OPTIMA Lithium was taking place Saturday on Lay Lake, a friendly in-state rivalry combining two of Alabama’s favorite pastimes was happening one lake up the Coosa River.

The Auburn University and University of Alabama bass fishing teams competed for bragging rights in their own Iron Bowl on Logan Martin Lake at the Abu Garcia College Fishing Faceoff Presented by This Is Alabama.

It was a close finish, but Auburn pulled away in the fourth quarter and won with a total of 68 pounds, 7 ounces for their two-boat team to Alabama’s 52-8. The College Faceoff was contested under MLF’s catch/weigh/release format, with officials on each boat and a minimum weight of 1-8 for a scorable bass.

Auburn’s four-man team consisted of Sam Harvey and Hayden Marbut in one boat and Blake Milligan and Carson Maddux in the second boat. Both schools wore headsets identical to those in the General Tire Team Series and communicated throughout the day.

“We talked together all day long and had a good time. It was a lot of fun,” said Marbut, winner of a recent Toyota Series on Lake Guntersville. “We were fishing the same things and communicating about it to stay on the same page. All of us were throwing a Berkley Powerbait Maxscent Flatnose Minnow on a Damiki rig in any shad color. It didn’t matter which one we were using.

Even though Logan Martin’s bass are itching to spawn, the Auburn duos decided to stick with this approach in open water.

“The bass are on the bank spawning, but there are still a bunch of fish out in the creek mouths, drains, and backs of little pockets,” Marbut said. “We were both targeting bait balls and using forward-facing sonar to catch our fish. We caught a bunch, probably 60 in our boat, and only one in three was big enough to count; you just had to weed through them to get a scoreable.”

Harvey and Marbut boated 37-14 on 19 bass and Milligan and Maddux added 30-9 for their 13 scoreable bass.

Alabama’s team consisted of Hayden O’Barr and Cooper Gilroy catching 21 bass for 40-5 in one boat and Patrick McMurray and Dillan Dolvera boating six for 12-3 in the other.

This was the first taste of the SCORETRACKER® pressure for several of the anglers, and they enjoyed the competition.

“It got really close there for awhile before we pulled away at the end,” Marbut said. “I’ve fished that format for a couple of different events, but fishing under this format with an official was a blast. It was intense all day and full speed ahead from the minute we started.”

The Iron Bowl football series dates back to 1893 and has 88 meetings in total. The budding bass fishing rivalry has a long way to go to match that, but both teams enjoyed the friendly competition.

“It’s not nearly as big as the football rivalry, but we tried to have some fun with it,” Marbut said. “We know a lot of those guys and compete against them in different events. I hope we can do another one of these sometime.”

Proud sponsors of the 2024 MLF Abu Garcia College Fishing Presented by YETI include: 7Brew, Abu Garcia, B&W Trailer Hitches, Berkley, BUBBA, E3, Epic Baits, Fishing Clash, General Tire, GSM Outdoors, Lew’s, Mercury, Mossy Oak, Onyx, Phoenix, Polaris, Power-Pole, Strike King, Suzuki, Tackle Warehouse, T-H Marine, Toyota and YETI.

For complete details and updated information visit MajorLeagueFishing.com. For regular MLF College Fishing updates, photos, tournament news and more, follow the MLF5 social media outlets at Facebook, Instagram and YouTube.



Bass Talk: Nick LeBrun on Gary Yamamoto’s 3-Inch Scope Shad Snack & Buckeye Lures Scope Head

The new fish snack that is catching Bass all across the country. Order some today at Discount Tackle.

SCOPE SHAD & SCOPE HEAD



Smallmouth and largemouth in play at Kayak Championship on Tenkiller

Lake Tenkiller is set to host the 2024 Yamaha Rightwaters Bassmaster Kayak Series Championship scored by TourneyX March 20-21. 

Photo by Mark Cisneros/B.A.S.S.

March 17, 2024

Smallmouth and largemouth in play at Kayak Championship on Tenkiller

TAHLEQUAH, Okla. — Qualified kayak anglers from around the country will gather in eastern Oklahoma to compete in the Yamaha Rightwaters Bassmaster Kayak Series Championship scored by TourneyX, and Oklahoma’s own Jim Baird believes there will be plenty of opportunities to catch both smallmouth and largemouth.

“We should be able to smack them,” Baird said. “It all depends on how much rain we get. I expect there to be good numbers of bass caught. There will be a few big bass caught.”

Tournament days are scheduled for March 20-21 in conjunction with the weeklong celebration surrounding the Bass Pro Shops Bassmaster Classic presented by Jockey Outdoors, and anglers will be able to launch from any approved public launch on the lake. The top finishers will be honored on the Classic stage at the BOK Center in Tulsa before Friday’s Day 1 weigh-in.

While its appearances on the Bassmaster schedule are limited, events held on Tenkiller have certainly been memorable. In 2018, Cody Huff and Bethel University partner Garrett Enders won a College National Championship there. The next year, Carl Jocumsen notched his first career Elite Series victory on the fishery.

Both of those events were held in the summer or early fall. But this time, kayak anglers will be dealing with a moody Oklahoma spring, which could bring any type of weather. The long-range forecast currently calls for daytime highs in the 70s, nighttime lows in the 40s and rain each day.

“Weather will be a huge part of this,” Baird said. “In a normal, mild season, water levels will be a little above normal and it will be stained to clear. It will be clear near the dam. The Illinois River can get pretty wild with not a lot of rain.”

Baird anticipates the bass will already be entering the prespawn phase. The smallmouth tend to set up on steeper banks and bluff walls. The river section could also yield big smallmouth bites if the water is high enough.

Largemouth, meanwhile, will be found around some of the flooded timber Tenkiller has to offer, as well as brushpiles and islands. If the water rises, buckbrush and bushes will provide flipping and pitching opportunities.

Spotted bass also inhabit the lake, but Baird views them as more of a nuisance and doesn’t expect them to factor.

“The largemouth will for sure be in prespawn, while the smallmouth may be a little behind,” Baird said. “They tend to spawn later. I think there will probably be more smallmouth caught.”

With bass in the prespawn mode, Baird said he anticipates a jerkbait being a key lure for the top finishers as well as a jig or a soft plastic.

“The jerkbait is probably going to be the biggest player,” he said. “That’s typical for anywhere really this time of the year.”

The field is made up of qualifiers from the 2023 Yamaha Rightwaters Bassmaster Kayak Series scored by TourneyX regular season. The winner will pocket $54,000.

The event is being hosted by Explore Cherokee County, Oklahoma, Tour Tahlequah and the Greater Tenkiller Area Association.

2024 Bassmaster Kayak Series Title Sponsor: Yamaha Rightwaters
2024 Bassmaster Kayak Series Partner: MotorGuide, YakGear
2024 Bassmaster Kayak Series Angler of the Year Sponsor: Dakota Lithium



Greg Gutierrez Moves Into Lead For Final Field Cut At BAM Trail Pro-Am Lake Oroville

Greg Gutierrez Moves Into Lead For Final Field Cut At BAM Trail Pro-Am Lake Oroville

BAM Pro/Am Circuit Second Stop: Top-10 Elimination

Oroville, Calif. – The top-10 cut to the final field of pro and co anglers was established following the Day Two weigh-in at the second stop of the BAM Tournament Trail (BAM TT) Pro/Am at Lake Oroville. Following a leaderboard shuffle of the top pros, Greg “Double G” Gutierrez of Red Bluff, Calif. settled into the first-place position adding 11.86 to his Day One weight for a two-day total of 25.19.  

“I would have never thought; not with what I had,” said Gutierrez. As the first-ever BAM Pro/Am champion crowned at the inaugural event on Lake Shasta, Double G is the only pro angler with the potential to go back-to-back in BAM. “That’s kind of a cool thing,” he stated.

Gutierrez started the fishing day in 5th place, trailing the Day One leader by a little over one-pound.

Although he weighed less today than yesterday, it was enough to climb the standings, securing the top position as he enters the final day of competition. “I found some new stuff towards the end of the day and culled three or four times,” he said. “For tomorrow, it looks like it will be okay, if I didn’t burn everything up, because I was poking everything that bit.”

Burnt up or not, Gutierrez plans to return to these same spots and see how it plays out. “It’s just loaded in there,” he said. “I’m going run my Bass Cat Puma from one end to the other slinging the steel off my Mercury prop and grind it out.”

Gutierrez is sharing his starting spot with fellow angler Zack Thompson from Alameda, Calif., also in the top-10.

“We’ve been doing this around each other for so long; he is professional and I’m professional, so we just work around each other,” Double G added. “He caught more fish out of there yesterday and I caught more out of there today. It is just the way it is.” Thompson sits in 9th.

JR Wright Rises Into Runner-Up Position

JR Wright of Truckee, Calif. came from 9th place yesterday to end Day Two in 2nd with 24.67, roughly a half pound back from Gutierrez. Wright is wild and out with fishing spots all over the lake. “I’m running from the west branch all the way to the middle fork, up the north fork,” he said. “I haven’t been up the south fork; but that could all change tomorrow.” He is targeting areas both deep and shallow. “I’m using some Keitechs and basically moving slow and methodically,” he added.

Aaron Britt Plans Adjustments For Final Day Of Fishing

Slipping to 3rd from his Day One top spot, Aaron Britt of Yuba City, Calif. found the changing conditions slightly more challenging. “I was fishing an A-rig yesterday and stuck with it today,” he said. “I didn’t get as many bites and clearly not as big of bites.”

His two-day total put him at 24.36, feasibly within striking range with less than a pound separating him from first. Britt’s plan for Day Three includes disregarding the river arm he had been in and seeking out main body locations. “I am going to slow down and fish some plastics on flats,” he revealed. “Green pumpkin has been a key color.”

Gasper Busalacchi Is The New Co-Angler Leader

Launching as the runner-up, Gasper Busalacchi from San Mateo, Calif. bumped lake local Jason Bubier off of the top of the co-angler standings when his two-day total of 21.27, surpassed Bubier’s by a mere .04. Busalacchi packed in a variety of baits to get the job done.  “I have a wacky-rigged Senko, a 3/8-ounce underspin, a shakey head, a jig, and a float ‘n’ fly; basically, I was ready for whatever place I ended up,” said Busalacchi.

Making it through the field cut, the top-10 pro and co-anglers will check in for their championship day at Loafer Creek Ramp on Sunday, March 17. Similar conditions are expected. Championship Sunday’s weigh-in will kick off by 3:30 p.m. at Loafer Creek Ramp. Tune in to watch LIVE.

Complete BAM TT Lake Oroville Day Two Results Are Available

Top-10 Pros:

Place/Angler/Day 1 Big Bass/ Day 1 Weight/Day 2 Big Bass/ Day 2 Weight/Total

1 Greg Gutierrez 03.78 13.33 02.66 11.86 25.19
2 JR Wright 12.25 04.22 12.42 24.67
3 Aaron Britt 04.35 14.44 09.92 24.36
4 Wyatt DeBusk 12.09 04.68 12.18 24.27
5 Asher Haynes 04.72 13.27 03.06 10.43 23.70
6 Antonio Gold 04.96 13.79 09.72 23.51
7 Joseph Orozco 03.27 12.96 10.45 23.41
8 Ryan Hall 02.90 12.83 02.96 09.87 22.70
9 Zack Thompson 14.39 08.20 22.59
10 Steve Hoover 11.46 03.10 10.94 22.40

Top-10 Co-Anglers:

Place/Angler/Day 1 Big Bass/ Day 1 Weight/Day 2 Big Bass/ Day 2 Weight/Total

1 Gasper Busalacchi 04.79 12.07 09.20 21.27
2 Jason Bubier 12.27 08.96 21.23
3 Rodney Brown 11.71 02.57 08.88 20.59
4 Chris Trumbull 02.60 09.24 02.75 10.78 20.02
5 Craig Main 10.28 09.48 19.76
6 Kirk Marshall 09.64 09.85 19.49
7 Roy Desmangles JR 11.80 07.39 19.19
8 James Rodgers 09.95 08.88 18.83
9 Tommy Rice 09.92 08.37 18.29
10 Dante Ray 03.36 10.74 07.48 18.22

About BAM Tournament Trail

The Bass Angler Magazine Tournament Trail (BAM TT), offers an unparalleled platform for anglers and sponsors, alike combining vast exposure opportunities that celebrate the skills of western bass anglers. The circuit garners extensive coverage across print and online magazines, websites, videos, television, and multiple social media channels.

Oroville Event Sponsors:

The Oroville tournament proudly welcomes a diverse array of sponsors including Bass Boat Technologies, Tackle Warehouse, Storquest, Crestco Rents, Gold Country Casino, and our dedicated conservation sponsor, Fisherman’s Warehouse.

Proud Sponsors of the BAM Tournament Trail:

BAM TT is honored to be associated with its title sponsor, Bass Boat Technologies, and presenting sponsor, Tackle Warehouse. The trail is also supported by Storquest, Garmin, Bass Cat Boats, Ford Fairfield, Dish – Accel Marketing, Power Pole, Mercury Outboards, Bob’s Machine, Wood Bros, Sticky Graphics, Jean Deleonardi Real Estate, Valley Outdoors, Eternal Lithium, Alpha Angler Rods, and Fisherman’s Warehouse.

BAM’s Esteemed Tourism Sponsors:

The BAM TT is grateful for the support of its tourism sponsors: the City of Oakley, the Lake Almanor Chamber, the Boardman Chamber, and the Feather River Tourism Association.

Tournament Details:

The BAM Tournament Trail features the BAM Pro Tour, Pro-Am, and Kayak events, each designed to test the determination of western anglers in a competitive and environmentally conscious format.

Connect with BAM TT:

To learn more about the BAM Pro Tour, Pro-Am and Kayak events. Visit: BAM TRAIL, Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and Instagram

Media and Advertising Inquiries: Please contact Mark Lassagne for further information regarding media and advertising opportunities.

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